Island Stories: Unravelling Britain (Theatres of Memory)

Island Stories: Unravelling Britain (Theatres of Memory)

by Alison Light (Editor), Alison Light (Editor), Raphael Samuel (Author)

Synopsis

This work offers an account of the heroes and villains, legends and foibles of the four nations that inhabit the British Isles. Raphael Samuel is interested by the face that traditions can disappear no less abruptly than they were invented. How is it, he asks, that the Scots have lost interest in a British narrative of which they were once a central protagonist? Why is the celebration of Britons thriving today just as its object has become problematic? The book conveys the mutability of national conceits. Samuels calls as witness numerous authorities - Bede and Gerald of Barri, Macaulay and Stubbs, Shakespeare and Dickens, Lord Reith and Raymond Williams, Margaret Thatcher and Tony Benn - each of whom sought to renew the sense of national identity by means of an acute sense of the past. A sequel to Theatres of Memory , the book is a study of the way nations use their past to lend meaning to the present and future.

$8.18

Save:$17.42 (68%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 413
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Verso Books
Published: 27 May 1998

ISBN 10: 1859849652
ISBN 13: 9781859849651

Media Reviews
A magnificent and irreplaceable collection --John Gray, New Statesman

A provocative lens into both the remote and the near British past. -- Publishers Weekly

A rich fund of subversive ideas. --Daniel Johnson, The Times

A stunning collection ... humane, optimistic, multi-textures, ever-meandering but always sparkling ... one of the finest and- paradoxically--most quintessentially English historians of our time. --Ben Pilmot, Independent on Sunday

Deeply researched, intelligently argued, lovingly presented, thoroughly excitable and immensely stimulating ... [Samuel is] as comfortable with seventeenth-century sectarians as with Victorian nonconformists, as familiar with the townlands of Ireland as the streets of London. --John Gillis, Left History

One of the most outstanding, original intellectuals of his generation: a passionate, creative and innovative social historian and a man of unique personal qualities and distinction of mind and spirit. --Stuart Hall, New Left Review

Provocative, original ... a powerful testimony to the unending dialogue between the present and the past that is the essence excitement of history. --David Cannadine, Observer

Raphael Samuel gave new meaning to the idea of history ... He brought to the writing and popularisation of history a seemingly inexhaustible energy and creativity. --Gareth Stedman Jones, Independent

Samuel was born to be an historian. He had the vital quality of living at the same time in the past, the present and the future. Everything interested him, from public health to colonial rebellion and from street lighting to street fighting. -- Times

The sheer scope and erudition of these pages is stunning ... an imaginative tour de force. --Terry Eagleton, Guardian
Author Bio
Raphael Samuel (1934-1996) was a tutor in History at Ruskin College, Oxford, and a founding editor of History Workshop Journal. His works include Theatres of Memory and Island Stories, also from Verso. For more information about his work, see The Raphael Samuel History Centre and Archive online.